Market Maker vs Market Taker: Should Bettors Use Exchanges or Traditional Books?

Pinnacle closing line value standard metric for sharp bettors.

They don't limit winners. Accept large bets. Use winners to sharpen their lines.

Business model: be sharpest book, attract sharp money, set market standard.
 
Pinnacle unique among traditional books. Operates more like exchange philosophy.

Accept all action, charge higher juice, use market to set prices.
 
Can't use Pinnacle in the UK though.

We've got Betfair which is almost as good.

And loads of shite bookies that limit you to a tenner if you win twice.
 
i just use paddy power and bet365... are those bad... should i be using something else...
 
Paddy Power fine for recreational betting. Will limit you if you win consistently.

Bet365 similar. Good for casuals, bad for serious bettors.
 
Conor if you're trying to bet less anyway, doesn't matter what platform you use mate.
 
fair point... six sessions into therapy now by the way... doing better... betting way less...
 
Back to the exchange discussion - Oli, what percentage of exchange volume comes from professional bettors versus recreationals?
 
When I worked there, approximately 70% of volume from 5% of users.

Sharp money dominates exchange volume. Recreational users provide liquidity but lose consistently.

Same dynamic as traditional books but more transparent.
 
Interesting statistic.

Suggests exchange structure doesn't eliminate sharp/square divide. Just makes it more efficient.
 
Correct. Exchanges don't make losing bettors win. Just offer better pricing and no limits.

Sharp bettors still extract value from recreational bettors. Exchange just facilitates more efficiently.
 
So even on exchanges, the squares lose and the sharps win. It's just the exchange takes a smaller cut than traditional books?
 
Basically yes. The ecosystem is similar but more efficient.

Traditional book: Sharp wins, square loses, book takes huge margin.
Exchange: Sharp wins, square loses, exchange takes small commission.

Better for sharps, slightly better for squares, worse for the house.
 
Which is why traditional books lobby against exchanges.

Can't have bettors actually getting fair prices innit.
 
US-based? No exchange access except illegal offshore options.

UK/Europe? Betfair recommended for anyone serious.
 
Princess if you're betting recreationally with small stakes, DraftKings is fine.

Exchanges matter more for people betting higher volume or seeking maximum efficiency.
 
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